On MovieTome: See the latest MOVIE TRAILERS!
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 21, 2007 4:53:00 AM

Reuters Logo Wal-Mart Stores said on Tuesday that it was now selling digital music downloads on its Web site without the customary copy-protection technology that limits where consumers can play the songs.

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, said its new MP3 music catalog included thousands of albums and songs from major record labels like Vivendi's Universal Music Group and EMI Group without copy-protection software, known as digital rights management.

Wal-Mart said it would sell the "DRM-free" MP3 downloads of music by artists like the Rolling Stones, Amy Winehouse and Maroon 5 for 94 cents per track or $9.22 per album. It said the new format let customers play music on almost any device, including iPods, iPhones and Microsoft's Zune portable media player.

The announcement comes as major record labels debate whether dropping DRM will hurt digital music sales or encourage piracy. Copy protection software prevents unauthorized copying of a digital song bought from an online store, but it also limits where an owner can listen to it.

Apple co-founder and Chief Executive Steve Jobs has called on the music industry to allow online retailers like iTunes to sell songs without restrictions to give the digital music sector a boost and to give consumers what they want.

Universal, the world's largest music label, said earlier this month that it was testing the sale of songs without copy-protection software and said vendors including Google, Wal-Mart and Amazon.com would participate in the DRM-free trial.

EMI has also agreed to drop DRM, but Sony BMG Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group are still testing the impact of such a move on digital music sales.

Apple, whose iTunes online music stores is the third-largest music retailer in the United States, has launched iTunes Plus, a copy-protection-free music download service.

Story Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 8 Talkback(s)
Why download poor quality music?
This is the digital age! Why do all those people pay to download less then CD quality music? Those poor quality downloads would be too expensive at fifty cents a copy.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: shanedr Posted on: 08/24/07 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
(NT) I wonder if Bitty will buy some :o) Jack-Booted EULA   | 08/21/07
Encoding quality? dherr@...   | 08/22/07
It's too large for me!! DeepFreeze3   | 08/22/07
Not the same quality tim914   | 08/22/07
192k is the happy medium... nix_hed   | 08/22/07
Tracking r_bigcat@...   | 08/22/07
Good Point about Mal-Wart Old Timer 8080   | 08/23/07
Why download poor quality music? shanedr   | 08/24/07

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

Whitepapers & Webcasts